These 2 Dow Stocks Are Set to Soar in 2025 and Beyond

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The Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI) does not typically include growth stocks. Instead, it tends to encompass the market’s largest stocks, with less thought given to the potential for outsize growth. Names in this group tend to be mature and relatively slow-moving businesses.

Nonetheless, a few stocks in the consumer sector have won inclusion in the index while still holding the potential for significant revenue increases. Hence, growth stock investors shouldn’t automatically write off Dow 30 stocks. They might want to take an interest in the following two companies:

Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) is best known for pioneering the e-commerce and cloud computing industries. Its strategic insight and ability to capitalize on its opportunities took it from an online bookseller to a retail and tech powerhouse.

However, you can argue that investors should know it for its ability to derive considerable growth despite a mammoth $2.4 trillion market cap. Companies of such size typically struggle with high-percentage growth since a mere 10% gain in Amazon implies a market cap increase of $240 billion, more than the entire market cap of most companies.

Still, that growth may make more sense if you look at the company as a collection of businesses. Its largest and oldest enterprise, online sales, is a low-margin business, and its financials imply the possibility that it is not profitable.

Instead, investors should look to the businesses supported by the sales site. Among them are its subscription business, third-party seller service, and digital advertising. The percentage growth of each of these businesses is currently in the double digits.

Hence, when the $450 billion in revenue for the first nine months of 2024 rose 11% year over year, it was not due to the online sales part of the business, which increased sales by only 5%.

Its cloud computing arm, Amazon Web Services (AWS), also showcases revenue growth in double-digit percentages. And AWS accounted for $29 billion of Amazon’s $39 billion in operating income in the first nine months of the year, making it a massive profit driver and growth catalyst for the stock.

Amid the rising sales, the stock is up 55% over the last year. Despite those increases, its price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) is 49. That is above the S&P 500 average of 31, but Amazon’s earnings multiple is just above multiyear lows.

So, while Amazon’s size makes high-percentage growth more difficult, it shows how it can still beat the market indexes. This power should hold the stock in good stead for years to come.

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